Current Projects

EU Code Week is a grass-roots movement that celebrates creativity, problem-solving and collaboration through programming and other tech activities. The idea is to make programming more visible, to show young, adults and elderly how you bring ideas to life with code, to demystify these skills and bring motivated people together to learn. In 2018 EU Code Week takes place between 6 and 21 October.

European Schoolnet in collaboration with Triseum, a Texas based company, runs the Triseum Validation Pilot. The project aims to explore whether the use of these games increases student classroom engagement and motivation to learn and how two learning games of Triseum can be implemented by teachers and used by students in secondary schools in different countries in Europe.

SELMA (Social and Emotional Learning for Mutual Awareness) is a two-year project co-funded by the European Commission which aims to tackle the problem of online hate speech by promoting mutual awareness, tolerance, and respect.

The aim of the project is to foster shared school leadership and effective networking through capacity building (self-assessment, training and sharing of best practices) within three key areas: STEM education, Innovative use of ICT in teaching and Digital citizenship.

BLOOM (Boosting European citizens knowLedge and awareness of biOeconOMy research and innovation) aims to establish open and informed dialogues, co-created by European citizens, the civil society, bioeconomy innovation networks, local research centers, business and industry stakeholders and various levels of government including the European Commission.

The Student Talent Bank project aims to promote entrepreneurial education in secondary schools among teachers in order to prevent early school leaving, facilitate the transition from school to work and increase students' engagement.

With the STEM School Label, school representatives will be able to evaluate their school via an online self-assessment tool according to the criteria defining a STEM School. This self-assessment tool will identify required areas of development and provide training and resources for applicant schools to improve their STEM activities at the school level.